Lipid Structural Effects of Oral Administration of Methylphenidate in

Apr 9, 2015 - Lipid Structural Effects of Oral Administration of Methylphenidate in. Drosophila Brain by Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry Imaging. Nhu ...
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Lipid Structural Effects of Oral Administration of Methylphenidate in Drosophila Brain by Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry Imaging Nhu T. N. Phan,†,‡ John S. Fletcher,†,‡,§ and Andrew G. Ewing*,†,‡,§ †

Department of Chemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Gothenburg, Kemivägen 10, SE-412 96 Gothenburg, Sweden National Center Imaging Mass Spectrometry, Kemivägen 10, SE-412 96 Gothenburg, Sweden § Department of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Chalmers University of Technology, Kemivägen 10, SE-412 96 Gothenburg, Sweden ‡

S Supporting Information *

ABSTRACT: We use time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (TOF-SIMS) imaging to investigate the effects of orally administrated methylphenidate on lipids in the brain of Drosophila melanogaster (fruit fly), a major invertebrate model system in biological study and neuroscience. TOF-SIMS imaging was carried out using a recently designed high energy 40 keV Ar4000+ gas cluster ion gun which demonstrated improved sensitivity for intact lipids in the fly brain compared to the 40 keV C60+ primary ion gun. In addition, correlation of TOF-SIMS and SEM imaging on the same fly brain showed that there is specific localization that is related to biological functions of various biomolecules. Different lipids distribute in different parts of the brain, central brain, optical lobes, and proboscis, depending on the length of the carbon chain and saturation level of fatty acid (FA) branches. Furthermore, data analysis using image principal components analysis (PCA) showed that methylphenidate dramatically affected both the distribution and abundance of lipids and their derivatives, particularly fatty acids, diacylglycerides, phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine, and phosphatidylinositol in the fly brains. Our approach using TOF-SIMS imaging successfully visualizes the effects of methylphenidate on the chemical structure of the fly brain.

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an ideal model for the study of mechanisms of drug abuse and neurological disorders such as epilepsy, Niemann-Pick disease, and Parkinson’s disease.7−10 Drosophila has been used in fast scan cyclic voltammetry studies of the blocking efficiency of orally administrated MPH on dopamine uptake and its effects on cocaine action on dopamine transporters.11 Kliman and coworkers applied highly selective and sensitive mass spectrometry (MS) coupled with ion mobility spectrometry to analyze the lipid profile in Drosophila epilepsy brains.10 Another example was the use of Drosophila for proteomic profiling for Parkinson’s disease using multidimensional liquid chromatography coupled with MS.12 Mass spectrometric imaging (MSI) techniques have recently attracted increasing interest in different research areas especially biology, pharmaceuticals, and neuroscience. MSI provides the opportunity to obtain the spatial structure of various biomolecules in many biological bodies from single cells to large biological tissue sections of several centimeters. Despite having a body of less than 2 mm and a head less than 1 mm in length, Drosophila has also been an attractive model for this new imaging area. Drosophila was used to study the distribution

ethylphenidate (MPH), an effective treatment for attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in children and adolescents, has been shown to elicit psychostimulant effects and addiction similar to cocaine and amphetamine.1,2 Because of a similar chemical structure to cocaine and amphetamine, MPH can block the reuptake by neurotransmitter transporters leading to the elevated synaptic catecholamine neurotransmitters in the brain, which causes a euphoric feeling and addiction in long-term use. Despite the widespread use as a therapeutic drug, the mechanisms of action of MPH on the nervous system are not clearly understood. A rising concern about the long-term treatment of MPH involves the adverse effects on the neurotransmitter system and the structure and function of the brain. It was shown that the levels of neurotransmitters and metabolites in Drosophila brain were dose dependent following administered MPH, and these were saturated at the administration dose of 20−25 mM.3 There is also evidence that in addition to acting on the catecholamine systems, MPH induces significant changes in the lipid composition of the brain,4 blood,5 and plasma.6 However, detailed information about specific kinds of lipids as well as spatial distributions of the target molecules affected by the drug has not been provided. Being one of the most common model systems in biological and neurological studies, Drosophila melanogaster (fruit fly) is © 2015 American Chemical Society

Received: February 12, 2015 Accepted: April 9, 2015 Published: April 9, 2015 4063

DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.5b00555 Anal. Chem. 2015, 87, 4063−4071

Analytical Chemistry

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heads in the same orientation. In order to subsequently obtain good sectioning, the fly collar contained no more than 11 flies. The fly collar was then put into a mold filled with 10% gelatin (Sigma-Aldrich, Stockholm, Sweden), which subsequently was solidified and frozen at −20 °C. The frozen gelatin block containing the fly heads was detached from the fly collar and sectioned using a cryo-microtome (Leica CM 1520, Leica Biosystems) at −20 °C under argon atmosphere to produce slices of 20-μm thickness in the dorsal direction. The brain sections were placed onto indium tin oxide (ITO) coated microscope slides and transported under liquid nitrogen to an argon-filled glovebox on the J105 SIMS instrument (Ionoptika Ltd., U.K.). The sample was quickly mounted onto the precooled insertion stage of the instrument in argon atmosphere in the glovebox preventing water condensation on the sample surface. Finally, the frozen hydrated sample was transferred into the main chamber and the analysis was carried out at a temperature below −170 °C. TOF-SIMS Imaging. TOF-SIMS measurements were carried out using a J105 TOF-SIMS instrument, for which operation principles are described in more detail elsewhere.25,26 The instrument is equipped with a 40 keV C60+ primary ion gun and a 40 keV Ar GCIB, which can produce clusters Ar1000−4000. The measurements with Ar GCIB were performed statically in positive and negative modes with Ar4000+ containing 8% CO2 to improve cluster formation. The focus of the ion beam was adjusted using different apertures. The beam size 6 μm/pixel with the primary ion current 50 pA was used to acquire the images of 128 × 128 pixels. The resulting primary ion dose density was approximately 5.6 × 1012 ion/cm2. Higher resolution images with 256 × 256 pixels were obtained with the beam size of 3 μm/pixel which produced a current of 9 pA and a primary ion dose density of 4.0 × 1012 ion/cm2. The measurement with the 40 keV C60+ gun was performed with 10 pA primary current and 1 μm/pixel beam size to obtain image of 256 × 256 pixels. The corresponding ion dose density was 3.8 × 1012 ion/cm2. The instrument provided mass resolution (m/Δm) of ∼6000 for m/z 798.64. For frozen hydrated analysis, the insertion stage and the analysis chamber were cooled down to −178 °C before the sample was inserted. During the measurement, the analysis chamber was kept below −170 °C. Data Analysis. TOF-SIMS data were processed using Image Analysis Software developed by Ionoptika Ltd. Data can be transformed to different formats suitable for further analysis, particularly principal components analysis (PCA). PCA analysis was carried out using Matlab (version R2013a, TheMathWorks). To reduce the number of data points and, hence, memory requirements, the spectra were binned to 0.05 m/z unit bins, which resulted in the mass accuracy 62 ppm at m/z 800. The spectra were then filtered from the background peaks (peaks from ITO coated glass and gelatin embedding material), mean centered, and normalized to the number of pixels of the analysis area and total ion counts of selected peaks before PCA analysis with NIPALS algorithm. Following PCA analysis, peak assignment was carried out using the unbinned data, which has a mass accuracy of about 6 ppm at m/z 800.

of six lipid classes including phosphatidylcholines, phosphatidylethanolamines, phosphatidylinositols, phosphatidylserines, and triacylglycerides in the entire body of the fly13 and to study the phospholipid distribution in the submillimeter-sized egg chamber using matrix assisted laser desorption ionization imaging mass spectrometry (MALDI-MSI). 14 We have developed an imaging protocol using time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (TOF-SIMS) for Drosophila, aimed at studying lipids and lipid related compounds in the fly brain with 3 μm spatial resolution.15 In a range of MSI techniques, TOF-SIMS is one of the most favorable in many different application areas. TOF-SIMS imaging has been increasingly used in biological applications owing to not only its nontargeted approach and chemical specificity like other MSI techniques but also its superior spatial resolution (